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"you rehearse until you're hitting everything on the head, and here comes a band like the Savoy Sultans, raggedy, fuzzy sounding, and they upset everything.'What am I doing here?' you wonder. But that's the way it is. That's jazz. If you get too clean, too precise. you don't swing sometimes, and the fun goes out of the music." - Trombonist Dicky Wells
 
 Friday, 09 January 2009
The Lynne Arriale Trio: Feeling the Melody, Feeding the Soul Print E-mail
Written by Andrea Canter, Contributing Editor   
Tuesday, 04 May 2004
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The Lynne Arriale Trio: Feeling the Melody, Feeding the Soul
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Lynne Arriale at the Dakota Although I have a Dakota “A-Train” membership, I seldom reserve both sets of each show for a given artist. But I always book every set when Lynne Arriale is in town. Doing otherwise would mean a lost opportunity. Not only does this trio produce some of the most elegantly accessible yet sophisticated music of any jazz ensemble working today, you will never hear—or feel—the same music twice. You might hear the same melody, even more or less the same arrangement if you attend consecutive nights. But you will always hear a new nuance or change of tempo; you will always feel something new. Once you feel Arriale’s piano tugging at your soul, you will have to return for more; she is addictive. And yes, I have reserved both sets, both nights when the Lynne Arriale Trio returns to the Dakota May 10-11.

Photograph courtesy of Howard Gitelson

Her performance at the old Dakota last spring was highlighted by two renditions of “The Nearness of You,” a popular standard that in less artful hands could easily be mundane or cloying. A standout track on her 2001 TCB release, “Inspiration,” her performance on the first night was indeed inspired, more slowly paced than on the recording and truly “singing” without need for vocalization. Yet the same tune on the second night went even further, stretching every note as if it was the last on Earth. Part of me never wants to hear that tune again so that I forever hold onto that last note.

Adopted as an infant, Lynne Arriale grew up in Milwaukee. She discovered the keyboard at age 3 on a plastic toy piano and “never stopped.” Earning a masters’ degree in classical music from the Wisconsin Conservatory of Music, she was well into her 20s before turning to jazz. Later she learned that her biological mother was a jazz vocalist—and perhaps there is something to heredity here as Arriale is as songful a pianist as one could imagine.



 
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